Theory of the vortex-clustering transition in a confined two-dimensional quantum fluid
Xiaoquan Yu, Thomas P. Billam, Jun Nian, Matthew T. Reeves, and Ashton, S. Bradley

TL;DR
This paper develops an analytical microcanonical theory for vortex clustering in confined 2D quantum fluids, revealing a continuous phase transition characterized by the emergence of a macroscopic dipole structure.
Contribution
It introduces a novel microcanonical analytical framework for vortex clustering, including exact critical parameters and vortex configurations, distinct from previous approaches.
Findings
Identifies a continuous vortex clustering transition with a macroscopic dipole formation.
Derives exact critical temperature and exponent within mean-field theory.
Shows excellent agreement with Monte Carlo simulations and experimental relevance.
Abstract
Clustering of like-sign vortices in a planar bounded domain is known to occur at negative temperature, a phenomenon that Onsager demonstrated to be a consequence of bounded phase space. In a confined superfluid, quantized vortices can support such an ordered phase, provided they evolve as an almost isolated subsystem containing sufficient energy. A detailed theoretical understanding of the statistical mechanics of such states thus requires a microcanonical approach. Here we develop an analytical theory of the vortex clustering transition in a neutral system of quantum vortices confined to a two-dimensional disk geometry, within the microcanonical ensemble. As the system energy increases above a critical value, the system develops global order via the emergence of a macroscopic dipole structure from the homogeneous phase of vortices, spontaneously breaking the Z2 symmetry associated with…
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